Thirty Year Fan Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Was a class act will be missed!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Offside Number 76 Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Goodnight, Jonathan Garvey. I came here to say this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peevo Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 "Merlin Olsen comes over, on occasion, it's stupid"-Ron Burgandy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KRC Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 RIP Merlin Olsen. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
eball Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Always liked the Enberg-Olsen combo on NBC. RIP. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bob in STL Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Truly sad news. Always like him as a player, commentator, spokesman and actor. RIP. ditto Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buckeyemike Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 RIP, Mr. Olsen. Likely the most famous person ever to attend Utah State University. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MyHorseAteTheKid Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Passes at 69 One of my childhood heros... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lori Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Don't know, but...asbestos is a mineral. Perhaps it was common where he grew up. Perhaps dad was a fire fighter, ship builder, construction worker. Asbestos was actually fairly common in building materials all the way through the early 1970s, added because of its flame-retardant properties. There was asbestos in the ceilings at my high school, and in the original floor tile in this house. And tons of it just down the street, in the factory where my grandfather and his brother worked. (My great-uncle died of lung cancer in 1981 -- the same year the PAAHP was established.) Olsen himself worked in construction, as he pointed out in a lawsuit he filed after his diagnosis. None of which matters now. R.I.P. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dollars 2 donuts Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Standard by which player color commentators should be measured. Godspeed Mr. Olsen. Yepper. I'll 2nd that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bbb Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Always liked the Enberg-Olsen combo on NBC. RIP. I've always wondered what happened to him as an announcer? He went from being part of NBC's #1 team to oblivion.......Does anybody know the story on that? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDD Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 I've always wondered what happened to him as an announcer? He went from being part of NBC's #1 team to oblivion.......Does anybody know the story on that? Very good question that I also don't have an answer on. He was at his peak an an announcer during the Joe Ferguson years. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PromoTheRobot Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 (Conrad Dobler) then played two final seasons with the Buffalo Bills, retiring after the 1981 campaign. Dobler, known for such transgressions as punching Mean Joe Greene, spitting on a downed and injured opponent (the Eagles' Bill Bradley) and kicking Merlin Olsen in the head,[1] parodied his image in a Miller Lite beer commercial by getting a section of fans to argue the eternal question, "Tastes Great! Less Filling!" (Olsen got a measure of revenge by placing Dobler's name on a headstone in a scene from Olsen's TV series Father Murphy). Wiki I believe Olsen also cheapshot Dobler's knees, effectively ending his career. PTR Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RJ (not THAT RJ) Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 (Conrad Dobler) then played two final seasons with the Buffalo Bills, retiring after the 1981 campaign. Dobler, known for such transgressions as punching Mean Joe Greene, spitting on a downed and injured opponent (the Eagles' Bill Bradley) and kicking Merlin Olsen in the head,[1] parodied his image in a Miller Lite beer commercial by getting a section of fans to argue the eternal question, "Tastes Great! Less Filling!" (Olsen got a measure of revenge by placing Dobler's name on a headstone in a scene from Olsen's TV series Father Murphy). Wiki I believe Olsen also cheapshot Dobler's knees, effectively ending his career. PTR How so? Olsen retired in 1976, Dobler in 1983..... Or do you mean the other way around? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fires Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 (Conrad Dobler) then played two final seasons with the Buffalo Bills, retiring after the 1981 campaign. Dobler, known for such transgressions as punching Mean Joe Greene, spitting on a downed and injured opponent (the Eagles' Bill Bradley) and kicking Merlin Olsen in the head,[1] parodied his image in a Miller Lite beer commercial by getting a section of fans to argue the eternal question, "Tastes Great! Less Filling!" (Olsen got a measure of revenge by placing Dobler's name on a headstone in a scene from Olsen's TV series Father Murphy). Wiki I believe Olsen also cheapshot Dobler's knees, effectively ending his career. PTR I remember this was posted a while back with Conrads famous quotes: One game, I knocked the crap out of Merlin Olsen. If you wanted to see it on instant replay, you had to go to the kitchen because I knocked him so far out of the TV frame. After the game, he says, "One of these days, someone's going to break Dobler's neck, and I'm not going to send any flowers." What happens? He gets the $500,000 FTD commercial, and I don't get ****. He goes to the Pro Bowl fourteen times. He's in the Hall of Fame. He's probably got more money than God. When he was doing Father Murphy on NBC, he had a graveyard scene. One of the tombs said: CONRAD DOBLER. GONE, BUT NOT FORGIVEN. It's been twenty years since I played him, and I'm still on his f mind. And I like that. http://www.esquire.com/features/what-ive-l...L#ixzz0htsLFaZc RIP Merlin Olsen Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWings Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Standard by which player color commentators should be measured. Godspeed Mr. Olsen. Indeed. He & Dick Enberg were a great pair. RIP, Merlin. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bills4154 Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 RIP big guy, one of the good ones and I enjoyed watching you as a player, commentator and actor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jerry Jabber Posted March 11, 2010 Share Posted March 11, 2010 Passes at 69 That's sad news. R.I.P. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike In Illinois Posted March 12, 2010 Share Posted March 12, 2010 Standard by which player color commentators should be measured. Godspeed Mr. Olsen. Olsen and Enberg were a great pair for football, in my opinion. Those two and Criqui/Trumpy were two pairs of some very good NFL broadcasters. Add in Summerall/Madden and the '80s were a heyday of quality announcers. (I'm too young to recall the '60s or '70s, forgive me). Rest In Piece, Mr. Olsen. You were truly a great one. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Red Posted March 12, 2010 Share Posted March 12, 2010 Total bummer. Grew up watching Little House on the Prairie re-runs before Happy Days re-runs as a kid. Fearsome foursome, FTD, the guy was cool. RIP Mr. Olson. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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